(Newser)
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A historic Massachusetts church started slowly rolling along the street Tuesday to make way for a nearly $1 billion casino, the AP reports. After weeks of preparation, crews began moving Springfield's 129-year-old First Spiritualist Church about two football-field lengths, where it will eventually stand next to a skating rink within the MGM Springfield casino's 14-acre footprint. Workers jacked up the brick church and placed it on an array of wheeled-dollies to inch the building to its new location. They hoped to have the 475-ton building over its new foundation by the end of the day. Relocating the 68-foot-by-43-foot church is part of MGM's historical preservation commitment to the city. The $950 million resort casino is expected to open in the fall of 2018, and the casino's gambling floor will be on what was once the church's home.

The high Victorian Gothic structure was originally known as the French Congregational Church. It was built in 1887 for the French-Canadian Huguenots, who worked in the Smith & Wesson gun plant, according to state records. Daniel Wesson, one of the gun-maker's founders, was a major church sponsor. The Protestant congregation eventually gave up the church because of dwindling membership, and it was sold in 1919 to the First Spiritualist Society. The Spiritualists moved from the church in 2013 to a new location in nearby Chicopee. The building has been on the National Register of Historic Places since 1983. A new use for the church has not yet been determined. (Read more church stories.)

"the casino's gambling floor will be on what was once the church's home" And there'll be a lot of praying.

TheRavenX

Apr 20, 2016 8:02 AM CDT

I can't believe the idiocy in this discussion thread. IT'S A BUILDING, IT HAS DONE NOTHING WRONG. It's amazing how people who claim to be better than those who "believe in a magic sky fairy" can turn around and place blame on buildings (churches) and abstracts (religion) for concrete issues. That's not only mind-blowingly hypocritical, but incredibly moronic. Especially for a population who considers themselves to be intellectually superior to the faithful.

Emma Düsch3

Apr 20, 2016 7:52 AM CDT

At least when you give money to a casino there is a remote chance you could come out ahead.